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Human Genome News Archive Edition

Vol.11, No. 3-4   July 2001
Available in PDF
 
In this issue...

In the News
* Genomes to Life
* OASCR and GTL
* DOE Microbial Cell Project
* Human Genome Draft
* Genome Perspective
* Honor for DeLisi
* New NIH Institute
* Structural Genomics
* Imaging Structures
* Synchrotron Use
* Proteome Organisation
* Breast Cancer Research
* Gene Expressions Used
* Nuclear Medicine
* Nuclear Medicine Labs
* Toxicogenomics Center
* Kettering Prize
* Zeta Phi Beta Conference
* Microbial Genomes
* Sloan-DOE Fellowships
* Ribosomes Illuminated
* In Memoriam: Walter Goad


Comparative Genomics
* Model Organism Studies
* Sushi Delicacy
* Arabidopsis Sequence
* AAAS Prize
* Microbial Conference
*
Flyer; "Microbe Month"
*
VISTA Software
Mouse
* ORNL Mouse Program
*
MicroCAT Scanner Used
*
Draft Sequence Achieved
*
NCBI Mouse Resources
*
Human-Mouse Comparisons
*
MGI Allele Searching

Web, Publications, Resources
* Next-Generation Computing
* HGMIS Resources
* NSF QSB Report
* Structural Biology Basics
*
Minorities and the HGP
*
HGP Educational Kit
*
Testing, Counseling Resources
*
Biotech, ELSI Websites
*
Biotech Encyclopedia
*
ASM Report
*
Nature Yearbook
* Next Wave Publication
* High-School Curriculum
* Education CD-ROMs
* Exploring DNA in the Classroom


Funding
* US Genome Research Funding
*
UK Scholarships, PostDocs

Meeting Calendars & Acronyms
* Genome and Biotechnology Meetings
* Training Courses and Workshops
* Acronyms


* HGN archives and subscriptions

Human Genome Project Information home

New Genome Project Tackles Sushi Delicacy

Scientists searching human genome data for genes and the DNA sequences that control their activity soon will have a valuable new resource, courtesy of the Japanese delicacy known as Fugu (Fugu rubripes) or pufferfish. An international consortium, led by researchers at the DOE Joint Genome Institute (JGI), has announced a collaborative agreement to sequence the Fugu genome.

Although the Fugu genome contains essentially the same genes and regulatory sequences as the human, it comprises only about 400 million bases as compared with the 3.2 billion bases that make up human DNA. With far less noncoding (sometimes known as "junk") DNA to sort through, identifying biologically important regions in the Fugu genome should be a much easier task. Comparing such DNA sequences from different species is an effective method because evolution tends to conserve these regions. JGI is generating draft sequences for the Fugu genome project and applying Jazz, a new sequence assembler written at JGI.

Sequence finishing and computational annotation are being done with other consortium members: U.K. Human Genome Mapping Project; Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology, Singapore; Molecular Sciences Institute, Berkeley; and Institute for Systems Biology, Seattle.

Pufferfish are raised in bulk on farms in Japan, where the taste is considered addictive. If prepared improperly, however, the flesh can be lethal due to a highly potent neurotoxin present in Fugu ovaries, intestines, and livers. Eating pufferfish claims the lives of about 70 to 100 adventuresome (or unsuspecting) diners each year, most in rural areas and from fish improperly cleaned at home. It is the only food forbidden to be served to Japan's royal family.

Fugu's deadly effects have caught the imagination of many authors, including Ian Fleming. Near the end of From Russia with Love, the fictional James Bond is almost killed by Fugu toxin.

next
Black-Spotted Pufferfish Black-Spotted Pufferfish. Photo by Jeff Jeffords, http://divegallery.com

The electronic form of the newsletter may be cited in the following style:
Human Genome Program, U.S. Department of Energy, Human Genome News (v11n3-4).

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Last modified: Wednesday, October 29, 2003

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